S&P 500   5,011.12
DOW   37,775.38
QQQ   423.41
What's Driving Tesla Lower Ahead of its Earnings?
How major US stock indexes fared Thursday, 4/18/2024
3 Steel Stocks Could Soar on New China Tariffs
CSX Co.: The Railroad Powering Ahead with an Earnings Beat
Bear Market Funds to Watch This Year
Shares of Walmart-backed Ibotta soar on public debut
Closing prices for crude oil, gold and other commodities
S&P 500   5,011.12
DOW   37,775.38
QQQ   423.41
What's Driving Tesla Lower Ahead of its Earnings?
How major US stock indexes fared Thursday, 4/18/2024
3 Steel Stocks Could Soar on New China Tariffs
CSX Co.: The Railroad Powering Ahead with an Earnings Beat
Bear Market Funds to Watch This Year
Shares of Walmart-backed Ibotta soar on public debut
Closing prices for crude oil, gold and other commodities
S&P 500   5,011.12
DOW   37,775.38
QQQ   423.41
What's Driving Tesla Lower Ahead of its Earnings?
How major US stock indexes fared Thursday, 4/18/2024
3 Steel Stocks Could Soar on New China Tariffs
CSX Co.: The Railroad Powering Ahead with an Earnings Beat
Bear Market Funds to Watch This Year
Shares of Walmart-backed Ibotta soar on public debut
Closing prices for crude oil, gold and other commodities
S&P 500   5,011.12
DOW   37,775.38
QQQ   423.41
What's Driving Tesla Lower Ahead of its Earnings?
How major US stock indexes fared Thursday, 4/18/2024
3 Steel Stocks Could Soar on New China Tariffs
CSX Co.: The Railroad Powering Ahead with an Earnings Beat
Bear Market Funds to Watch This Year
Shares of Walmart-backed Ibotta soar on public debut
Closing prices for crude oil, gold and other commodities

Lyft (NASDAQ: LYFT) Shares May Have Another 50% to Drop: The Bear Case

Lyft (NASDAQ: LYFT) Shares May Have Another 50% to Drop: The Bear Case

San Francisco, CA-based, Lyft, Inc. NASDAQ: LYFT was the first of the “unicorn” rideshare companies to IPO on March 29, 2019. Priced at $72-per share, LYFT opened for trading at $87.24 briefly spiking to $88.60 before commencing its ominous descent to $37.07 lows. Despite the S&P 500 making new all-time highs, over 25 analysts buy ratings and improving metrics since its IPO, Lyft shares continue to disappoint investors as Bears argue that Lyft shares still carry another 50% of downside risk to under $20-per share.

What Lyft Leaves Out of Its Earnings Reports

Lyft released its Q2 2019 earnings on Oct. 30, 2019, reporting revenues of $955.60 million beating consensus analyst estimates of $915.15 million, a 63.4% YOY revenue growth rate. Earnings came in at negative $463.5 million or ($1.57) per share beating the ($1.66) estimates by $0.09-per share. While the 63.4% YOY growth appears impressive on the surface, Lyft leaves out critical details to verify actual evidence of market-driven demand versus growth through cost-cutting, notably driver pay cuts.

Lyft Moves the Goal Posts

Investors got a rude awakening with Lyft’s Q1 2019 when they stated they would not disclose gross bookings numbers (total fares collected, and total rides given) or revenue as a percentage of bookings (RPB) also known as the “take-rate” as suggested on page 83 of their S-1 filing. Keep in mind, gross bookings is to transportation companies what same-store sales are to retail department stores. It’s a standard industry metric of top-line growth that even its competitor Uber NASDAQ: UBER still discloses with each quarterly earnings release. Lyft calculates their revenue as the portion of the fare they receive minus driver’s wages (including incentives and bonuses).


A 10% Take-Rate Boost for 50% Revenue Growth

Lyft could theoretically have flat YOY gross bookings but still, bolster revenue growth by upping their take-rate through driver wage and bonus pay cuts. Let’s take a simple example, if gross bookings were flat at $100-million year-over-year, Lyft could bolster their revenues by cutting driver pay to proportionately improve their take-rate from 20% to 30%. While their gross bookings show no improvement, Lyft could still juice their revenues from $20 million to $30 million indicating 50% YOY growth. 

The Path to Profitability or Mediocrity

There is evidence of driver pay cuts from the switch to Personal-Power-Zones (PPZ) flat-rate “surge” bonuses from the previous Primetime “multiplier-surge”, which means Lyft pockets the bulk of the extra fare premiums riders pay during busy periods. Lyft has also been rolling out drastic mileage pay cuts in various cities. As of Aug. 14, 2019, Raleigh-Durham, North Carolina Lyft drivers are being paid $0.3075-per mile down from $0.57-per mile, a 45% pay cut and well below the Federal standard mileage deduction of $0.58-per mile. While Lyft did increase the time pay from $0.105 to $0.135-per minute, the bulk of a driver’s pay is anchored to mileage. Even worse, Lyft’s Express Drive program locks in rental car drivers to pay rates as low as $0.22-per mile. The bottom line here is that Lyft is burning the candle at both ends by cutting driver pay and raising passenger fares with the assumption of no blowback. Bears argue this “path” can’t sustain itself, especially with more government intervention on the horizon.

The AB5 Contagion

California’s reasoning for AB5 is weighted heavily on recouping up to $2 billion in lost tax revenues stemming from the misclassification of independent contractors. If California implements AB5, this could be a death knell to Lyft more than Uber. Both platforms benefit from saturating the roads with drivers since they only pay when drivers are on trips. They don’t pay for the idling and trawling time that drivers perform (which adds to traffic congestion). If drivers are classified as employees, Lyft would have to pay for driver liquidity (minimum wage, mileage reimbursements and payroll taxes) which analysts anticipate could raise expenses by 30%. It also means driver liquidity becomes a zero-sum game, which further raises costs.

From Unicorn to Taxi Dispatcher

Lyft’s so-called path to profitability is a path to mediocrity. The S&P 500 Transportation Index ETF NYSEARCA: XTN has a weighted Price-to-Earnings (P/E) ratio of 13.93 and Price-to-Sales (P/S) ratio of .70. As of Nov. 9, 2019, Lyft’s market capitalization of $12.66 billion on estimated FY 2019 revenues of $3.58 billion revenues equates to a 4X P/S ratio. This over 4X the average P/S. If Lyft does reach profitability by the end of 2021, investors can expect the market will further price shares in accordance with transport industry metrics along the lines of a 13 P/E ratio. As it stands, even at a generous 2X P/S ratio, Lyft should be trading under $20-per share.

 

Where should you invest $1,000 right now?

Before you make your next trade, you'll want to hear this.

MarketBeat keeps track of Wall Street's top-rated and best performing research analysts and the stocks they recommend to their clients on a daily basis.

Our team has identified the five stocks that top analysts are quietly whispering to their clients to buy now before the broader market catches on... and none of the big name stocks were on the list.

They believe these five stocks are the five best companies for investors to buy now...

See The Five Stocks Here

10 "Recession Proof" Stocks That Will Thrive in Any Market Cover

Which stocks are likely to thrive in today's challenging market? Click the link below and we'll send you MarketBeat's list of ten stocks that will drive in any economic environment.

Get This Free Report

Companies Mentioned in This Article

CompanyMarketRank™Current PricePrice ChangeDividend YieldP/E RatioConsensus RatingConsensus Price Target
Lyft (LYFT)
3.2108 of 5 stars
$16.71-3.5%N/A-18.78Hold$14.60
SPDR S&P Transportation ETF (XTN)N/A$77.53-0.4%0.90%11.60N/AN/A
Compare These Stocks  Add These Stocks to My Watchlist 

Jea Yu

About Jea Yu

  • JeaYu21@gmail.com

Contributing Author

Trading Strategies

Experience

Jea Yu has been a contributing writer for MarketBeat since 2018.

Areas of Expertise

Equities, options, ETFs and futures; fundamental, qualitative, quantitative and technical analysis and pattern identification; active and swing trading; trading systems and methodology development

Education

Bachelor of Arts, University of Maryland, College Park

Past Experience

U.S. equity markets trader, writer and analyst for over 25 years. Published four books by publishers McGraw-Hill, John Wiley & Sons, Marketplace Books and Bloomberg Press. Speaker at various expos and seminars and has been quoted and featured in USA Today, The Wall Street Journal, Traders Magazine, The Financial Times and various trade publications, including Stocks & Commodities, Active Trader and Online Investor.


Featured Articles and Offers

Search Headlines: